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lchiang_gw

How to propagate Michelia Champaca, and Alba from seeds?

lchiang
15 years ago

I have both mature Micheila Champaca and Micheila Alba trees. They both produce fruits and seeds. Any one tried propagating them by seeds? Any tips?

Comments (8)

  • alba-mickey
    15 years ago

    jimshy: I have a micheilia alba tree for 19 years. I have it grounded in my backyard in San Francisco. It is about 25 feet tall and have a a lot flowers. This month I noticed that my michelia alba tree has a seed. I would like to know how to propagated from seed. Do you know how the prepare the seed for germination? Need your advices. Thank you. My email : mickeykwok@earthlink.net

  • longriver
    15 years ago

    jimshy's suggestion is sound. I know it is not an easy seed germinating like bean sprout. I tried air layering. It will show strong callus but little root( possible due to temperature condition). The best way for me is still Approach Graft. I used to order understock 'Magnolia kobus' from wholesale grower from Oregon.

  • cestrum
    15 years ago

    M. alba I believe is normally propagated by grafting (onto M. champaca I think). Don't know whether this is due to the difficulty of propagating from seed or growing from cuttings, or whether the alba doesn't come true from seed. Possibly all of the above.

    M. champaca is grown on its own rootstock and is not too difficult to grow from seed, provided the seed is fresh enough and the temperature is warm enough. I tried numerous times to grow it from ebay-bought seed but had always sowed them in spring or early summer, when nights can still occasionally be fresh. (I don't have a heat mat.) It was only when I sowed seed in mid-summer, when night temperatures hover around 20-20 deg C (about 70 deg F) that they germinated. So they need 24-hour warmth (ie no cool nights), and humidity (I misted them with water and covered with plastic) to germinate. I believe that the champaca DOES come true from seed. Unless, perhaps, there are other species of michelia in the vicinity with which it has hybridised ...

  • albertt91007_yahoo_com
    13 years ago

    I want to share my experience with M. Champaca seeds.I have ordered some seeds from India over a year ago. Last year, I tried to germinate over potting soil without success. This Year I tried to give the seeds a little help. I used a very sharp knife to remove the hard shells from the seeds, then I have them soaked in very hot water for 30 minutes. This will help to drive out the air in the seeds, so water could get inside. Next I put the seeds in a piece of wet paper towels. Then in a plastic bag and put them over a small florescent light over my aquarium. In 2 days, they germinate.Try this and see it works for you or not.

  • tylorgv
    11 years ago

    hello albertt91007, am thinking of buy m. champaca seeds from a seller on ebay. this seller lives in florida. hopefully the seeds are fresh. i have a heating mat and a greenhouse. thanks for the sowing tip.

  • Mickey Kwok
    10 years ago

    Thank you so much for the tips on how to propagate the michelia alba seed. But I never try it before. I live in San Francisco the weather is not that hot at night. At spring the weather is only around 55 to 60 degree and summer time only around 65 to 70 degree. Can the seed germinate at that kind of weather? In the spring or summer to let the seed to geminate? Need your advice. Here is a picture of my michela alba seed from my tree.

  • Marc Le
    2 years ago

    albertt91007_yahoo_com hi albertt not sure if your still on houzz but im have a few questions regarding your success with champaca. I also ordered 100 seeds from india from seedpost on etsy, but it took 4-5 months to receive them. not sure if there is a short life span on the seeds, maybe someone here can enlighten me since theres so little info on the net about propagating these successfully.


    When did you plant your seeds?

    how far did you sand the seeds down? ( theres some seeds where i sanded them down past the seed coating, then some i sanded down until i saw a small hole in the seed lol not sure if thats ok or damages the seed too much)

    do the seeds need light to grow ? (as i am keeping them warm indoors a styrofoam box within plastic bag and heating mat)


    I live in san francisco zone 9


    I know nurseries propagate them from seeds, just not sure the steps how and when.


    thanks for answering if you do :)